Our Inaugural Labial Landmark Selection
belongs to
Ballet's Extra-ordinary Ballerina...
...Michaela DePrince!
This 'Most Mysterious' part of the face is 'God's Beauty Mark' on his 'First Powerful
Ancient Warriors!' (Approx. 275,000 years ago)
Winge's Peak (elatus labialis wingeulus), a genetically-dominant physical trait, is an
'appendage' over the upper lip's middle tubercle frontal surface, and
is a naturally-occurring, variably-manifested, vertically-oriented, differentiated
soft tissue, epithelial-emanating fold or ridge or line or prominence, or
otherwise, with subepithelial components (Winge's Peak Connective Tissue
Complex), which coincides with the midline of the face and the interincisal
and mid-sagittal lines, and runs down the middle of the middle tubercle
surface of the rostral upper lip, which may extend inferiorly from the middle
of the Vermillion Border's Cupid's Bow, down to the lower edge of the lip,
with or without significant elevation above the surrounding lateral labial
tissues, with or without the presence of differentiated vermillion surface
epithelium (Winge Epithelium) seen along the linear crest of the Peak,
and with or without the presence of an inferiorly-positioned procheilon.
"All humans that have evidence of an elatus labialis wingeulus
on their upper lips
are
considered to have 'Potentiated Functional Capacities to 'be, think, and act,''
and are said
to be
direct descendants of the newly-proposed prehistoric humanoid species
homo
wingeulus."
"The Winge's Peak is a confirmatory sign that a person has the
'Super-Humanity-Power Genetics Trait' among their chromosomes," proposes
Ralph Winge, D.D.S., USC Dental School Grad and
elucidator of elatus labialis wingeulus.
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